COP24: Climate summit focuses
on Paris Agreement rule book
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| Session of the COP24 Climate Conference in Poland.- AFP |
The COP24 Climate Conference taking place in Katowice,
Poland continues Tuesday with negotiators getting down to the finer points of
the meeting.
By Lydia O'Kane
A series of technical talks got underway aimed at finalizing
the rules that define the 2015 Paris agreement on curbing global warming. The
diplomatic discussions come a day after U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres
made a dramatic appeal to governments to act boldly to avert a catastrophic
rise in temperatures before the end of the century.
Paris Agreement rule book
Attending the conference is the relief and development
agency, Christian
Aid which works with hundreds of local partner organisations in
some of the world's most vulnerable communities. Speaking from the summit
in Katowice, Communications Manager for the charity, Joe Ware, explained more
about this rule book, saying, “one of the big issues that’s being discussed
here is creating the operating manual for the Paris Agreement, which was the
big agreement signed in Paris in 2015… and so, we’re creating this rule book
which will lay out and which will allow us to assess all the national pledges
that different countries have put forward… So, this rule book is one of the
crucial things they’re discussing and hopefully that will be something that
will be signed at the end of this summit in two weeks.”
Dramatic warning on Climate Change
Speaking about the UN Secretary General’s powerful opening
speech to the conference on Monday, Joe described it as, an emotional address.
“You don’t usually get such emotion and such passion from the boss of the
UN…and I think it reflects the fact that we have had this recent report from
the World Scientists, the IPCC saying that we really are facing a potential
crisis if we don’t accelerate this transition to a low carbon economy, he said.”
Despite the fact that US President Trump has announced that
he will pull his country out of the Paris Accord, the Christian Aid
Communications Manager noted that, “it has actually shown how strong the
agreement is, because we assumed that as soon as America pulled out, China
would pull out; Russia would pull out; all these other countries would take the
opportunity to get out, but actually none of them have done…”
Christian Aid and advocacy
As an anti-poverty charity, Joe said that Christian Aid was
at the COP24 summit to advocate on behalf of partner organisations and
vulnerable communities who are severely affected by climate change. He went to
say that sadly, “climate change is that ultimate injustice and that’s why we
need a fair and equitable process that will deal with that problem.”

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